Meteo Colloquium
Regional responses of extreme precipitation to climate change: a role for both dynamical understanding and machine learning.
Unless otherwise noted, meteorology and atmospheric science colloquia are held each Wednesday at 3:30 p.m. during the fall and spring semesters in the John J. Cahir Auditorium (Room 112) in Walker Building. Refreshments will be served just after the colloquium in the Joel N. Myers Weather Center.
Non-employee Information Form (formerly Visitors Information Form): This form is a requirement for all Penn State visitors if Penn State will be paying for any expenses (either directly or indirectly, such as directly billed room charges).
A Non-Employee Travel Form is also required to process expenses.
Meteorology Visitor Schedules (requires password to access)
Meteo Colloquium
Regional responses of extreme precipitation to climate change: a role for both dynamical understanding and machine learning.
Meteo Colloquium
The science and purpose the Naval Research Laboratory’s Marine Meteorology Division
Meteo Colloquium
Drag and Drag Partition in Vegetated Urban Canopies
Meteo Colloquium
Linking climate feedbacks to ocean heat uptake
Meteo Colloquium
Assessing the predictability and probability of a summer ice-free Arctic
Meteo Colloquium
Remote Sensing with the CYGNSS Constellation
Meteo Colloquium
Investigating the diurnal cycle in tropical cyclones
Meteo Colloquium
How to handle nonlinearity in multiscale problems: pushing the frontier of data assimilation methodology
Meteo Colloquium
An Overview of Artificial Intelligence in NOAA.
Meteo Colloquium
Stochastic and machine learning assisted models of population dynamics of convective clouds and their applications to parameterization
Meteo Colloquium
Diving into Cold Pools
Hussey Lecture in Meteorology
Save PA to Save the Bay—Strengths, challenges, opportunities, & threats in Pennsylvania’s efforts to meet clean water obligations
Meteo Colloquium
Evaluating and improving short-term forecasts of the Arctic ocean-sea ice-atmosphere coupled system using process relationships from the MOSAiC campaign
Meteo Colloquium
Co-spectral budgets link energy distributions in eddies to bulk flow properties